Sunday 5 February 2017

Wole Soyinka expresses disappointment in the Nigerian police

Nobel laureate, Wole Soyinka, has expressed disappointment in the Nigerian police for seeking to stop the protest planned by a Nigerian top pop music star, 2face Idibia, against Federal Government alleged non-performance. He described the police action as undemocratic.


Although 2face has backed out on the protest scheduled for  Monday, February 6, in Lagos for security reasons, the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), the Enough is Enough group and a popular comedian, Olaseyitan Lawrence, popularly known as Seyilaw, have said in spite of the musician’s action, the protest would not be called off.

The Nobel laureate, who said he had sent a message to the Inspector-General of Police, through the Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Fatai Owoseni, declared that  he was shocked to learn from media reports that the office of the IG could issue a statement stopping the protest.

He described the action as “a huge disappointment, a disservice to the cause of democracy, tolerance of dissent, and principle of inclusive governance.”

Soyinka said, “The police attempt to reverse the hands of the democratic clock is even more appalling at a time when open demonstrations are taking place all over the world against the policies of a recently elected President of the United States, (Donald Trump), whose democratic formula allegedly serves as Nigeria’s adopted model. Across numerous states of that federated nation, ongoing at this very moment, is the public expression of rejection of a President’s policy that has also pitted the executive against the judiciary. We have heard of no preventive action by the police, or arrests of demonstrators.

“Again and again, efforts, both under military and civilian orders have been made to stifle the rights to freedom of expression by Nigerian governments – Buhari, Babangida, Obasanjo, Abacha, Jonathan….and now again, Buhari? These efforts have been, and will always be resisted. It is a moral issue, as old as settled humanity. It has been settled in other parts of the world. Nigeria cannot be an exception, not as long as her citizens refuse to accept the designation of second, even third-rate citizens.”

Soyinka urged the police to respect the constitutional rights of Nigerians.

He said, “I hope that, even at this eleventh hour, legality and the democratic imperative will prevail. Finally, I shall be less than honest if I do not add the following, mostly directed as a warning to the very polity on whose behalf the democratic war is joined, again and again:

“Minus a minuscule but highly voluble minority, mostly of pitiably retarded polluters of the common zones of public interventions, I do not know of any citizens of civilised community who do not subscribe to the fundamental Right of the Freedom of Expression in any form, as long as it is peaceful, and non-injurious to humanity. I would hate to conclude that the security agencies, or the government they serve, at this stage of national development and recent history, would choose to align themselves with such an unteachable minority.”

Meanwhile, Seyilaw has expressed his disappointment at 2face’s decision to opt out of the planned rally.

Seyilaw said though he understood 2face’s concern, he was not deterred and “God knows I will still be at the stadium tomorrow whether people gather there or not.

“I have a right to be at the stadium too,” Seyilaw wrote on his Instagram page on Sunday.


No comments:

Post a Comment